Categorized | Business

Liquor License Fees Paid To Local Municipalities

Liquor license fees paid off for some municipalities.

Liquor license fees paid off in Limerick, too.

POTTSTOWN PA – Pottstown, Collegeville and Royersford boroughs, and Lower Pottsgrove and Limerick townships were among 61 Montgomery County (PA) municipalities that recently were paid licensing fees by the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board (PLCB) for the six-month period ending July 31, the board reported Friday (Oct. 23, 2009).

Fees are collected whenever a liquor license application, renewal or validation is approved, according to PLCB Chairman Patrick Stapleton. The money is distributed to the municipality where the license is located to help defray the cost of local law enforcement. PLCB cuts its license fee checks twice a year.

Receiving fee reimbursements, and the amounts paid, were:

  • Pottstown, $5,450;
  • Limerick, $4,950;
  • Collegeville, $800;
  • Royersford, $450; and
  • Lower Pottsgrove, $250.

All municipalities combined received more than $2.3 million in fees, the board said. The largest distribution during the six-month period was for $385,875 to the City of Pittsburgh.

There are almost 20,000 liquor licensees and permittees statewide, including restaurants, clubs and beer distributors. To continue selling alcohol, licensees and permittees are required by Pennsylvania’s Liquor Code to renew or validate their licenses annually.

Established in 1933 at the end of the national Prohibition, the PLCB regulates the distribution of beverage alcohol. Additionally, the board operates 618 Wine & Spirits Stores. It reported sales of more than $1.8 billion in fiscal 2008-09, and a return of $494.5 million in taxes and profits to the state.

Photo from Clipart.com

Sign up to get The Sanatoga Post delivered free daily by e-mail.
See our galleries for photos that appear in The Post. Got news for us? E-mail The Post.

Share

Comments are closed.

From Our Sponsors

From Our Sponsors

RSS Business News

  • Pepsi drops sponsorship of horse show after video of animal abuse May 18, 2012
    NASHVILLE, Tennessee (Reuters) - Soft drink maker Pepsi said on Thursday that it was dropping sponsorship of a prestigious national horse show, one day after ABC News broadcast footage of a horse in training for a show being beaten by a trainer. […]
  • Facebook wraps up IPO, set for big Friday pop May 18, 2012
    SAN FRANCISCO/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Facebook Inc is set to raise up to $18.4 billion in its IPO and become the first U.S. company to be worth more than $100 billion at its debut, as investors bet on a big pop in the stock when it begins trading on the Nasdaq on Friday. […]
  • China second quarter GDP growth seen at 7.5 percent: government think-tank May 18, 2012
    BEIJING (Reuters) - China's annual economic growth could slow to 7.5 percent in the second quarter, largely due to curbs on the property sector and headwinds from external demand, the State Information Center, a government think-tank, said in a report published on Friday. […]
  • GM ad move followed failed Facebook pitch: sources May 18, 2012
    DETROIT/NEW YORK (Reuters) - Facebook may only have itself to blame for why General Motors rained on its IPO parade this week. […]
  • Buffett tried to buy ResCap before bankruptcy: report May 18, 2012
    (Reuters) - Billionaire investor Warren Buffett sought to buy Residential Capital (ResCap) from Ally Financial before the U.S. auto and mortgage lender put its home-lending unit into bankruptcy, Bloomberg said, citing three persons familiar with the matter. […]
  • JPMorgan unit has $100 billion in securitized assets, structured debt: FT May 18, 2012
    (Reuters) - The unit at the center of JPMorgan Chase & Co's recently revealed $2 billion trading loss has built up more than $100 billion in positions in asset-backed securities and structured products, the Financial Times said on Thursday. […]
  • Nervous investors send S&P lower for fifth day May 17, 2012
    NEW YORK (Reuters) - Stocks hit a four-month low on Thursday as rising Spanish bond yields increased investor anxiety over that country's banks and another round of weak data undermined hopes for U.S. economic recovery. […]
  • MF Global clients bash fat fees, seek quick wind-down May 17, 2012
    (Reuters) - The legal team winding down MF Global's bankruptcy estate, led by former FBI director Louis Freeh, has racked up nearly $25 million in estimated fees since its November 25 appointment. […]
  • Gupta trial could feature big corporate stars May 17, 2012
    NEW YORK (Reuters) - Lloyd Blankfein, Warren Buffett and other well-known chieftains of corporate America might be called to testify at the insider trading trial starting on Monday of former Goldman Sachs Group Inc and Procter & Gamble Co director Rajat Gupta. […]
  • JPMorgan's Dimon says will testify before Congress May 17, 2012
    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - JPMorgan Chase & Co Chief Executive Jamie Dimon has agreed to testify before Congress over the bank's recent trading losses, which have ignited a political debate over whether large U.S. banks need to be reined in by regulators or new laws. […]